FIRE MARSHAL'S POWER DEFINED Procedure in Service of Notices Is Outlined by Deputy Attorney General An opinion defining the procedure of the State Fire Marshal in serving Jiotiees for improvement of buildings as to lessen fire hazards, which question has been arising in a number of counties of the State recently, was given to-day to Marshal Port by Deputy Attorney General Horace W. Davis- A number of complications have ensued because the act of 1911 j provides that when a building is found in such condition that makes it subject to an order of the marshal for removal or repair, "such order shall forthwith be complied with by the owner or oc cupant of such premises or building." Mr. Davis says, in part: "We would advise you when making an order upon the owner of a building or premises to serve a copy of such order upon the > occupant, with directions that ho per mit the owner to immediately enter ' such premises for the purpose of com plying with the order, and that he notify you of his consent thereto. When the order is for removal or de struction of the building the occupant should particijlarly be made a party so that he may be given the right of rppeal for the purpose of showing that the dangerous condition may be reme died by repairing, for the reason that the extraordinary powers given to you must be guarded so that they may not be made a vehicle whereby the owner may dispossess a tenant prior to the termination of his lease or otherwise improperly interfere with their con tractual relations." Conspirators Sentenced to Be Shot in Their Backs Rome. Oct. 20. An Austrian spy named Larace and two Itali;uts have been condemned to be shot in the back.by the Ancona court martial for complicity in the attempt to burn thej port of Genoa. With this conspiracy, it seems, were connected explosions in munition factories in Milan and else where, aggregating in damages a total of several millions of dollars. The Austrian, who was at the head of the plot, sought out Italian crimi nals. gaining an ascendancy over them so that he could command their co operation for only nominal sums. In one case the price for an attempt to blow up one of Italy's greatest steel works at Terni was about SO. If this attempt had been successful, it would : have retarded military operations for several months. I-arace had In his possession when arrested eight jointed walking sticks of about the size of a man's little fin- I ANGORA GOATS HEAR CAM, OF THE WILD IX OREGON Hood River. Ore., Oct 20. —■ Por the last several weeks mountaineers who have made the ascent of Mount Hood have been contradicting statements of authorities on northwestern natural j history by reports of having sighted; wild sheep or goats high on the snow-1 fields of the peak. A drove of the animals near the summit of the snowpeak. huddled un der the shelf of a glacial precipice, was recently seen. The mystery was explained by P. 11. Mohr.a young up per valley homesteader, who was in city on business. W "It's mv herd of Angoras run wild," t,.Jd Mr. Mohr. I I I Every Day New Customers Tell Me That One of Their Friends Told Them of My Store ©. That is gratifying. Hut how much more picas- . jjj ing it is to see my customers of last Spring come back here for their l"all Sloes. Fully ninety per tent, of the folk* who bought Shoes Jk here in the Spring are now coming in for their Shoes. That proves to me the goods. Let me prove it to you. msi New Autumn 49c M W* W, Shades VTomtn'm S3 Black ymf | English Shoes; new I W imc or Pearl j. . win $2 - 45 £ 1 _ h (5 Ul UU Women's $3 Black (Pal|Q!> ' SI -O Q ali 8-inch Lace Boots \wjmm6SGGk\. Spats; gray or laco English styles; S3 quality, at XjA<atent colt Button FRIDAY EVENING, HXKRISBURG CTWP TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 20, 1916 Special 3 oz. Bottle Sale s Sa? He pa t ica* P ° Wder gj 25c Aromatic Spirits Ammonia, 3 HHHIk •' •'■' •'•'•' ; - £ w,;,HY,™v.; y .. S '^SS&Sr*fs6.::. : .Ss !8 00 Peruna s'so Camphorated OU, 3 oza. ...15c c Williams* Pink Pllis at)c - 5c Tr - Arnica. 3 ozs 15c P.S?e KacePowdir::: 2'oc =*c *<>* Water and Glycerine 3 o Pa'imollve*Cream |5o Z Soap Linlment; ' 07.'.'.*.'. 15c ? pl ! 18 .:::• S c 7" 150 urea Extract, bot 25c 25c Barker's Liniment 15c ' r .v Garden Sachet, bot 10c 50c Barker's Liniment 29c er Kiss sachet, bot 10c 50c Mulsilled Cocoanut 0i1.... 29c urea Sachet, bot 10c 25c Gets-It 15c c Mustcrole 15c 50c Damschinsky Hair Dye ...2c c Pierce Pellets 12e SI.OO Nuxated Iron 59c c Epsom Salts, lb 6c 50c Kodql Dyspepsia Tab 29c c Gem Glades 25c 50c Black Caps 25c c Atwood Bitters 15c $1 Pierce's Golden Med. Disc. 570 .00 D. D. D. for Eczema 08c 50c Pierce's Anuric Tab 2tc Wampole Cod Liver Oil, 55c SI.OO Pierce's Fa v. Presc 57c iloriile I,line, 5 ozs 5c 60c Father John's Med 38c Hetcher Castorla 20c SI.OO S. S. S 55c c Hall s Catarrh Cure 45c Chloride Lime, 12 ozs 9o .00 Sargol Tablets 59c $3.7 5 Horllck s Malted Milk. .$2.75 lb. Merck's Sodium Phosphate $1.20 Scott's Emulsion 75c r 15c 25c Ottar Tropical Talc 17c c I)lapepsin 29c 1 Pint Witch Hnzel and bot 17c c Creuie de Merldor ;tOc 1 Pint Denatured Alcohol for burn c Forinamiiit Tablets 29c lng 15c V c Mercolized Wax 48c 1 Pint Bay Rum. imported ....SHc IS c Malena Pills 12c 1 lb. Moth Balls 15c 1 c Limestone Phosphate .... 20c Quaker Herb Extract B7c £ c Daggett and Ramsdell Cold Herpicide 59c ■ Cream Sic Kolynos Tooth Paste 15c H .00 Foley's Kidney Pills 59c Swansdown Face Powder 9o ||i c Baume Analgeslque Bengue,34c 50c Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, ,29c ■ c National Corn ltemover ... 5c ——————— H o Colorite 15c /q ® c oo h Deutone mm ??!.sl.2s i c Bags 68c c"jad"saHs' !!'•!!!!!!!!*!!! 420 $-5-50 Whirlpool QQ iS SJsrK4ff?U'i':::::Ss Sp ™ 5 ;. s '' rinst . c I c Laxative Bromo Quinine.. 15c Fountain Syringe, 2-qt., m c Soda Mint and Charcoal Tab. 5c * vvn i nr H mKKnr m. r*. H pT P Ps° s ... ...... 48c f c Maybelle Choco- OQ - j Stuffed Olives late Cherries t ~ { , ' /I r jT c Old-Fashioned O Q/ , 1 g Chocolate Drops, C One Gem Razor, with |1 c Milk Chocolate QP- Blades SI.OO | Fruits and Nuts . . 35 C 7 Extra Blades 35c B : c Maybelle Deli- of f cious Chocolates . . jOC $135 *' c Chocolate QQ Our Special Price Sat- . Mougates OiJC urday S9O A WOMAN'S WAY Cornelius Vanderbilt said, in a re cent argument on preparedness: "Thev who would rely on a volun tary militia, instead of on a conscript army, know as little about real pre paredness as a woman about tobacco. " •Why," satd she. "it's all nonsense to say a woman can't buy her hus band's cigars. As for me. 1 never j have the least difficulty." "'No? What's your system?" she was asked. " 'I just take along a sample stump.' j she said, 'and there's never the least j trouble about matching the shade!' " —j Washington Star. PRIZE EDITORIAL OF COLORED WRITER IS STRONG FOR HUGHES Among the three prize winners in | the series of editorials on "Why' Charles E. Hughes Should be Elected." j the Philadelphia Ledger announces the name of James Weldon Johnson. 1 an able colored author and writer. | who is vice-president of the New- York branch of the National Associa-< tion for the Advancement of Colored People. Mr. Johnson is a native of Jacksonville, where he was born in 1871 and has written many poems be sides doing much literary work. His editorial in support of Mr. Hughes is as follows: "The vital consideration before the country in the coming presidential election is in some degree a question of choice between the policies of the \ two great parties, but in an over-1 whelming degree it Is a question of j choice between the personalities of the candidates of the two great parties: it i is a question of choice between the! man Charles E. Hughes and the man : Woodrow Wilson. "This anomalous condition has been ; forced on the country by Woodrow ; Wilson. He has made his own unlit- j ness for the presidency a greater issue ■ than the unfitness of his party to be j continued in power. This he has done by acts inexcusable in the head of a nation. There are partisans of the President: who point to his program' of legisla- j tion, claiming that it more than over balances all his shortcomings. But even if it is granted that Mr. Wilson should receive credit for whatever j constructive legislation Congress has 1 passed in the last three and a half years, the claim of these partisans j would not necessarily hold good. Mr. I Wilson's shortcomings are not the kind that can be overbalanced. A > man might become the president of a I bank, and by his industry and his 1 ability as a financier build it up Into a ' great and prosperous institution. He j may smoke or swear or drink or refuse to join the church, and still be a good bank president: but if he embezzles one dollar of the funds intrusted to him he at once and forever establishes his unfitness for such a position, re gardless of what his other qualiflra- j tions and virtues might be. Mr. Wil- I son has demonstrated his unfitness to be President of the United States, not withstanding what his abilities and achievements may be. "No man of timidity, of Indecision, of inaction and of cowardice Is fit to be the head of a great nation, no mat ter how learned or virtuous or elo- 1 quent he may be. As well make such a man the captain of a ship. Such a man at the head of affairs constantly places the State in danger, and his in fluence saps the very thing that makes a group of people into a nation. Pres ident Wilson has shown that these arc 1 ingrained traits of his character; and | he has brought us the danger and wrought us the harm. "His partisans declare that he kept up out of war. In truth, no country has sought a fight with us, but these . traits of Mr. Wilson's character have i more than once brought us to the | brink of war and, in the case of Mexi- ! so, backed us over into a petty and j dishonorable war. But greater than I the danger has been the harm. The? very fact that a considerable numberl of American citizens are not ashamed j to proclaim openly their thanks that j timidity and cowardice on the part of the President kept the country out of j war Is proof of the emasculating in fluence the administration of Wood-, row Wilson has had on the nation. A few more administrations like the' present, and the United States would cease to be a nation worthy of the; name. i"But timidity, indecision. Inaction and cowardice are noi the only traits of character that make Woodrow Wil son unfit for the presidency of the | United States. In nearly everything that he says or does there is revealed a profusion, a smoothness, a shiftiness, a lack of simple directness, a sense of calculation, a flavor of opportunism that makes It difficult to believe In his sincerity. There is always the impres sion that he is not going straight and ! clean to his object. And even when he j appears to be going straight and clean, there the impression that the ob ject he seems to be going at is not the main object in his mind. "Who can escape the conviction that j Mr. Wilson is at heart a pacifist who 1 for policy's sake has masqueraded as 'an advocate of preparedness? Or that he is at heart an anti-suffragist who for policy's sake speaks fair words to the women? "These traits of character are en tirely at variance with American ideals. The people of this country want to feel that they have in the White House a man whose actions are not governed by cowardice and cover ed up by hypocrisy. They want a man who speaks right out, who says what he means and means what he says and acts accordingly. "Such a man is Charles Evans Hughes. His whole public career is a record of serene courage, sincere con victions and straightforward action. No one can doubt his meaning or in tention when he says concerning the Adamson bill: "If I were President I would not yield to force, whether put forth by capital or labor or any other agency—l would rather stand on that principle and be defeated than yield one ,lot or t!ttle to get into office." No Intellectual sleight-of hand in those words. The truth and earnestness behind them can be felt. "Charles E. Hughes fits the true and traditional American ideal of what a President should be. He Is the man that the country stands In need of now, and the man the country will stand more In need of In the critical years to follow. The United States is to-day nationally sick. More than anything else, it needs the national spirit revitalized, the national con sciousness reawakened. That is what Mr. Hughes means when he says: "I want to see America firm in insistence upon her just rights with the Ideals of peace, but knowing how to secure peace with honor. 1 want to see America prepared for every emergen cy. alert, efficient, going forward in the front rank in the new era of com petition among the nations." "We shall have such an America under Charles E. Hughes; such an America under Woodrow Wilson Is an impassibility." "I FELT SO BLUE AND DOWNHEARTED" SHE SAYS Well-known Pleasant View Woman Tell-, How Tanlac Brightened Her Outlook on Life "Life held no pleasures for me," says Lizzie Parlaman, of Pleasant View, Pa., for I always felt so blue and down-hearted that I took no In terest in anything. "I do not expect to have the spirits and vigor of a woman in her twenties but 1 do like to have a cheerful out look on life. And yet I was In such bad shape that I could not seem to smile, I was that low spirited. "I was constipated. my kidneys gave me a great deal of trouble and 1 had a constant backache. The kind of dull heavy pain that you wake up with In the morning and that stays with you all day long and never lets up. "One day as I was reading my paper I happened to see an article about Tanlac and as 1 know the person mentioned I read it just out of idle curiosity. Strange as it may seem the symptoms mentioned were identical with mine and as this woman spoke so highly of Tanlac I made up my mind that I would try It. "It Is certainly a wonderful remedy for in the short time that I have been taking it I can notice a wonderful improvement in my health and spirits. "It has changed my whole outlook of life and I now take a happy cheer ful view of everything. The backache has left me entirely, my kidneys have recovered their strength and I am no longer toubled with constipation. I feel better and happier than I have for years. Tanlac, the famous reconstructive tor.i'c so highly praised by so many of our local citizens is now being Intro duced here at Gorgas Drug Store, where the Tanlac man Is meeting the people and explaining to them th? merits of this master medicln'e. Come see the Tanlac window.—Ad vertisement. American Flyer Thought He Was Native of France Paris, Oct. 20. Sergeant Raoul ! Lufbery of Xew Haven, Conn., the j first American to be mentioned in a j communique for bringing down five hostile aeroplanes, is known as the I American who thought himself a Frenchman. Lufbery's parents died when he was ! very young and he was brought up I by a family at Bourges. At the age i of 13 he ran away from home and I, wandered all over the world, turning his hand to all sorts of trades. At Sa gion he met the aviator Marc Pourpe, who trained him as his assistant. The first time #iat Lufbery discovered that he was an American was when, on the Actual Size of Briquettes HAVE YOU TRIED Gamble Coal Briquettes? The Sensible Substitute For Hi^h-Priced Coal Already hundreds of people have been convinced that Gamble Coal Bri quettes, made of river coal, is the most economical fuel they can buy. One trial proves all we claim. I Gamble Coal Briquettes can be used wherever coal is now being used— either in stove, furnace, range or open fire grate—will positively give greater heat—burn freer—no clinkers—much less ashes— fire can be started more quickly and will hold heat and fire longer than the best grade of Anthracite coal. Phone or mail us your trial order—cold weather has been predicted so order NOW. Bell Phones 3549J and 1302J—C. V. Phone 135. X Ton $1.75 X Ton $3.25 IT°2 $6.00 Above prices include delivery to your home. Slight extra charge for delivery outside of city limits. TERMS CASH. The Gamble Fuel Briquette Go. ! outbreak of the war ho went to en list with Pourpe. Ho was rejected on account of his nationality, but, after many appeals, was allowed to go with Pourpe as his mechanic. Pourpe was killed soon afterward and Lufbery swore to avenge him. Ho importuned his superiors to allow him to train as a pilot and his request was finally granted. He brought down all of the five German machines re quired for mention in a communique since July 20. The first three were destroyed within three days. Champion Boy Farmers Out Carraling New Ideas Berkeley, Cal.. Oct. 20. ln quest of new ideas in farming, the 24 cham pion boy farmers of California lef here on a nine thousand-mile journey They won this trip in a special car. bj defeating eleven hundred competitor. l in the University of California's an nual crop-growing contests for higl school agriculture clubs. These boys are led by Prof. D. H Crocheron, of the University of Cali fornia, on a visit to the most famous orchards, breeding farms, and agri cultural industries of America, so ai to bring back to California the stimu lation of knowledge of the best meth ods in farming in other parts of tin country. The university's object il to help train leaders for country lifl in California. The boys will continul east as far as New York city, return ing to Berkeley byway of New Or leans and Texas. 11